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The Transatlantic Materials of American Literature

Katie McGettigan

Publishing US Writing in Britain, 1830-1860

Barcode 9781625346865
Hardback

Original price £70.91 - Original price £70.91
Original price
£70.91
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Release Date: 24/02/2023

Genre: Technology & Engineering
Sub-Genre: Industry & Industrial Studies
Label: University of Massachusetts Press
Series: Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book
Language: English
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press

Publishing US Writing in Britain, 1830-1860
Examines the British editions of American fiction, poetry, essays, and autobiographies from writers like Edgar Allan Poe, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Frederick Douglass. Putting these publications into historical context, Katie McGettigan considers developments in copyright law, changing print technologies, and financial considerations.
During the antebellum period, British publishers increasingly brought out their own authorized and unauthorized editions of American literary works as the popularity of print exploded and literacy rates grew. Playing a formative role in the shaping of American literature, the industry championed the work of U.S.-based writers, highlighted the cultural value of American literary works, and intervened in debates about the future of American literature, authorship, and print culture.

The Transatlantic Materials of American Literature examines the British editions of American fiction, poetry, essays, and autobiographies from writers like Edgar Allan Poe, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Frederick Douglass, and Hannah Flagg Gould. Putting these publications into historical context, Katie McGettigan considers key issues of the day, including developments in copyright law, changing print technologies, and the financial considerations at play for authors and publishers. This innovative study also uncovers how the transatlantic circulation of these works exposed the racial violence and cultural nationalism at the heart of the American experiment, producing overlapping and competing visions of American nationhood in the process.